Town Crier
Request a township
All typesagendaminutesproposalbudgetother
All time30 days90 days1 year

22 results for “revenue collection” · budget

  • Date: April 9, 2024 Page: 1 of 32 MEMORANDUM To:

    Apr 9, 2024

    ·Tucson, AZ
    Budget

    The City Manager presented the Fiscal Year 2025 Operating and Capital Budget to the Mayor and Council on April 9, 2024, emphasizing long-term financial sustainability, strategic investment, and employee retention as key priorities. The budget reflects adjustments to the previously planned 5-year General Fund Investment Plan due to forecasted revenue decreases from the State's new flat income tax policy, which will reduce the city's shared income tax collections for FY25 and FY26 more than initially expected. The FY25 budget continues funding for public safety equipment and facilities, collector streets per Proposition 411 commitments, and adds a $6 million local match requirement for a Housing Choice grant award.

    AI summary

    budgetpublic safetyhousingrevenuefinancial planning
View PDFSource
  • Mayor's 2023 Proposed Budget

    Nov 2, 2022

    ·Spokane, WA
    Budget

    Mayor Nadine Woodward's 2023 proposed budget, presented November 2, 2022, addresses a $37 million revenue loss from the pandemic while forgoing a 1% property tax increase for household financial relief. The budget prioritizes people-focused investments including increased shelter space, homelessness services, public safety, sanitation, garbage collection, and workforce retention in a competitive labor market. Sales tax revenue is projected to increase 5.9% overall in 2023, though gains are not expected to continue due to anticipated recession.

    AI summary

    budgetproperty taxpublic safetyhomelessness servicessanitation
    View PDFSource
  • Approved 2021 Budget

    Hazleton, PA
    Budget

    The 2021 approved budget projects total real estate tax revenue of $5,175,772, representing an 89–90% collection rate and a decrease of $1,165,921 from the prior year budget. The budget includes resident taxes of $30,000 (Ordinance 1949, $5 per resident over 21), per capita tax of $175,000 (Ordinance 1933, $10 per resident with income over $5,000), earned income tax of $2,632,000 (split between regular 1% EIT and Act 47 special designation), real estate transfer tax of $275,000 (city's share of 2.5% transfer tax), and local service tax of $345,000. Real estate tax collections are administered by Luzerne County's Agent, Northeast Revenue, with earned income taxes collected by Berkheimer Services.

    AI summary

    View PDFSource
  • 2023 Budget

    Mahanoy City, PA
    Budget

    The Borough of Mahanoy City, Pennsylvania presented its 2023 Annual Budget to Council on November 15, 2022, and approved it on December 13, 2022, with no proposed tax increase and millage maintained at 35.524 mils across General Fund (25.5 mils), Sinking Fund (0.124 mils), Street Lighting Fund (3.85 mils), Debt Reduction Fund (4.75 mils), Library Fund (0.35 mils), and Fire Tax Fund (0.95 mils). The budget reflects a $1,656,340 increase in total taxable assessed value from 2022 to 2023, generating approximately $42,300 in additional Real Estate Tax Revenue at a 72% collection rate, and incorporates $70,000 from the ARPA fund to cover costs for a fifth police officer. The General Fund Operating Budget projects $63,890 more revenue than the 2022 budget, supported by increases in Real Property Taxes ($579,989.40), Local Tax Enabling Act 511 revenue ($804,500.00), Grants & Government Revenue ($103,028.33), and Public Safety revenue ($54,800.00). The Borough is scheduled to exit Act 47 financial recovery status in March 2023, ending a designation that began in 2016.

    AI summary

    View PDFSource
  • 2026 Initial Budget Draft Version 1.0

    Hazleton, PA
    Budget

    The City of Hazleton's 2026 Initial Budget Draft proposes total General Fund revenues of approximately $16.1 million, with real estate taxes representing the largest component at $10.3 million (current year: $9.6 million plus prior year collections of $736,000). Special taxes are projected at $4.6 million, comprising earned income tax at $3.3 million, real estate transfer tax at $425,000, local service tax at $375,000, and payroll prep tax at $500,000 (with $300,000 withheld for potential Amazon mispayment return). Building and alterations permits are budgeted at $1.15 million for 2026. The budget document, dated October 28, 2025, shows comparative data across 2024 actual, 2025 current budget, and 2026 proposed figures, with an amendment column for Council passage modifications.

    AI summary

    budgettax increasereal estate taxearned income taxbuilding permits
    View PDFSource
  • 2012 The City of San José’s Budget Crisis INSIDE Introduction The City’s Budget

    San Jose, CA
    Budget

    San José, Northern California's largest city with nearly one million residents, faces ongoing multi-year budget shortfalls with expenses outpacing revenues over the past decade. The city's general fund relies primarily on property and sales taxes, though San José receives only a small percentage of taxes collected (9% of property taxes and 12% of sales taxes), with 61% of expenditures dedicated to public safety and community services. The city is required by charter to approve a balanced budget annually by June 30 through a nine-month community-based process that includes multiple opportunities for public input.

    AI summary

    budget crisispublic safetyrevenueproperty taxsales tax
    View PDFSource
  • Budget and Tax Reports - Oklahoma City

    Oklahoma City, OK
    Budget

    The City of Oklahoma City follows a fiscal year budget cycle running July 1 to June 30, with the budget process beginning in March and culminating in Council adoption in June. The fiscal year 2026 budget was introduced to Council on April 29, 2025, presented again on May 13 and May 27, and adopted by City Council on June 3, 2025, following a March 4 budget workshop featuring a five-year economic forecast. Sales tax and use tax are the primary revenue sources for the General Fund supporting day-to-day operations, with monthly sales and use tax reports prepared throughout the fiscal year. Hotel tax, collected on a per-night basis for hotel stays, supports infrastructure and tourism and convention efforts in Oklahoma City. Budget books and detailed financial reports are available for fiscal years 2022 through 2027.

    AI summary

    budgettax revenuefiscal planningpublic financehotel tax
    Source
  • O p e r a t i n g B u d g e t 2 1 Operating Budget OVERVIEW

    Boston, MA
    Budget

    The FY25 Operating Budget totals $4.64 billion, representing an 8% ($345 million) increase over FY24, driven primarily by property tax revenue growth which accounts for 71% of estimated revenue. Of the budget increase, 25% is allocated to education (Boston Public Schools and charter school tuition), 31% to departmental expenses and strategic investments including the integration of the Boston Planning and Development Agency, 18% to pension and debt service, and 26% to a reserve for collective bargaining. The budget emphasizes maintaining basic city services, public safety, climate response, and affordability through sound fiscal management and service improvements.

    AI summary

    budgetproperty taxeducation fundingpublic safetypension and debt service
    View PDFSource
  • S u m m a r y B u d g e t 1 5 Summary Budget OVERVIEW

    Boston, MA
    Budget

    The FY17 Recommended Operating Budget totals $2.97 billion, representing a 4.0% increase ($114.8 million) over FY16, driven primarily by local revenue sources including property taxes and local receipts that comprise 93% of revenue growth. Expenditure growth is concentrated in City Departments, Boston Public Schools (35% of spending), and the Public Health Commission, increasing by only 1.5% over FY16 due to expiring collective bargaining agreements, while the budget maintains the city's fiscal management while reinvesting savings into targeted initiatives. Revenue continues to be dominated by the net property tax levy (68% of total revenue) and state aid (15%), with state revenue growth remaining modest at 1.9% following the previous recession.

    AI summary

    budgetproperty taxpublic schoolsfiscal management
    View PDFSource
  • Approved 2023 Budget

    Hazleton, PA
    Budget

    The 2023 Approved Budget documents the City's General Fund revenues across multiple tax categories. Real estate taxes are projected at $5,568,719 for current-year collections plus $321,000 from prior-year collections, totaling $6,229,719 with no changes from the proposed budget. Earned income tax revenue is budgeted at $2,050,000 (1% tax collected by Berkheimer Services, split 0.5% to the City), real estate transfer tax at $400,000 (representing the City's 0.5% share of a 2.0% transfer tax), and local service tax at $300,000. Resident taxes and per capita taxes, previously levied under ordinances from 1933 and 1949, were removed as revenue sources in 2022. The budget was approved by Council on 11/17/2022 with no amendments to the proposed revenue figures.

    AI summary

    View PDFSource
  • Approved 2022 Budget

    Hazleton, PA
    Budget

    The 2022 Approved Budget document presents General Fund revenue projections for the City of Hazleton. Real estate taxes represent the largest revenue source, with current-year collections projected at $5,478,385 and prior-year collections at $321,000, totaling $6,139,385 with no proposed change. The budget eliminates three revenue sources: Residence Tax ($30,000 in 2021), Per Capita Tax current-year ($125,000 in 2021), and Per Capita Tax prior-years ($50,000 in 2021). Earned Income Tax is projected at $1,950,000 with no change, while Real Estate Transfer Tax is budgeted at $300,000 and Local Service Tax at $345,000. The document notes that residence and per capita taxes are slated for removal as revenue sources under existing ordinances.

    AI summary

    budgetreal estate taxrevenue projectiontax eliminationlocal service tax
    View PDFSource
  • Approved 2020 Budget

    Hazleton, PA
    Budget

    This 2020 approved budget document presents the General Fund revenue projections for the municipality. Real estate taxes represent the largest revenue source, budgeted at $4,276,573 for 2020 (comprised of $3,979,573 in current-year taxes based on a 4.76 mill rate and 90% collection rate on $959,164,934 total valuation, plus $297,000 in prior-year collections). Earned Income Tax is projected at $1,950,000 for current-year collections at a 1% rate allocated equally between the city and Hazleton School District, with an increase to 1.3% for the city under the Hazleton City Recovery plan. Additional revenue sources include per capita taxes ($125,000 current year, $50,000 prior years under a $10 levy), real estate transfer tax ($275,000 at 2.5% on transfers), resident taxes ($30,000 under a $5 per-resident levy), and Local Service Tax ($345,000). The 2020 proposed budget shows a 3% increase ($117,387) in total real estate tax revenue compared to the 2019 final budget.

    AI summary

    View PDFSource
  • City of Hazleton 2026 Budget Presentation

    Hazleton, PA
    Budget

    The City of Hazleton's 2026 Budget Proposal, presented November 13, 2025, recommends a real estate tax increase of 2.308 mils, representing a 25.3% increase, driven primarily by a projected $1,016,204 drop in total revenue and a 16.2% increase in healthcare costs exceeding $800,000. The revenue decline stems from a $300,000 reduction in PPT tax collections due to overpayment recovery, a $252,204 decrease in miscellaneous revenues including reduced GSC commission reimbursement, and an unresolved funding arrangement with the HCA following the end of their previous agreement in 2024. The proposed millage breakdown allocates 10.49 mils to the General Fund, 0.19 mils to the recreation fund, and 0.76 mils to the Debt Service Fund, with debt service remaining level despite the city's 2018 borrowing final payment of $102,000 occurring in 2026. Additional cost pressures include normal contractual pay increases and increased funding needs for legal and engineering support expenses.

    AI summary

    View PDFSource
  • 2025-26 City Manager's Proposed Budget (PDF)

    Phoenix, AZ
    Budget

    The City of Phoenix presented its balanced Fiscal Year 2025-26 City Manager's Proposed Budget on May 6, 2025, which includes a projected $17 million General Fund surplus that the City Manager recommends be set aside as reserve due to economic uncertainty, slowing revenue collections, and potential impacts from state and federal funding changes. The budget proposal follows extensive community engagement, with 12 budget hearings held between April 1-16 that generated resident feedback broadly supportive of the proposed budget and requesting additional city services; the city also allocated $2 million in American Rescue Plan Act interest earnings to the Housing Trust Fund. Final budget action is scheduled for the May 21, 2025 City Council meeting, with detailed fund schedules included in the proposal.

    AI summary

    budgetgeneral fundhousing trust fundreserve fundsrevenue
    View PDFSource
  • FY2025 Budget Presentation Dennis Rogero Chief Financial Officer

    Tampa, FL
    Budget

    The FY2025 recommended budget totals $1,827.3 million across all funds, with the General Fund at $652.9 million (35.7%) and Enterprise Fund at $735.9 million (40.3%). Major revenue increases include $20.3 million from property taxes, $18.6 million from other taxes, and $15.0 million from miscellaneous revenues, while expenditure increases are driven by $36.5 million in salary and benefits adjustments, including negotiated raises of 4.5% for police, fire, and transit unions and 3% for non-collective bargaining employees. The budget includes five new full-time positions and maintains a general fund balance target of 23-28%, with fire and police expenditures totaling $388.9 million and $53.9 million allocated to tax increment financing revenues for Community Redevelopment Agencies.

    AI summary

    budgetproperty taxsalary and benefitspublic safetycommunity redevelopment
    View PDFSource
  • 2025 Solid Waste Fund

    Allentown, PA
    Budget

    The 2025 Solid Waste Fund (Fund 085) for the City of Allentown projects total revenues of $23,786,761, a significant increase from the 2024 adjusted budget of $16,757,076, driven primarily by trash collection revenues rising from $15,458,750 to $22,228,305. Total expenditures are allocated across personnel costs of $4,793,529, services and charges of $17,101,801 (including $16,798,007 for other contract services), materials and supplies of $242,486, and capital outlay of $569,500. The fund maintains an opening balance of $833,127 for 2025, adjusted from the 2024 opening balance of $2,720,750. Key revenue sources include commercial trash collection at $343,035, grants at $344,921, and state aid for pension at $200,000.

    AI summary

    solid waste managementbudgettrash collectionmunicipal servicescapital outlay
    View PDFSource
  • City of Toledo 2021 Approved Annual Operating Budget Detail Schedules I.

    Toledo, OH
    Budget

    The City of Toledo's 2021 Approved Annual Operating Budget includes detailed schedules for revenues and expenditures across multiple funds and cost centers, with comparative data from 2018–2020. Key revenue sources include withheld income taxes ($154.0 million), business income taxes ($16.4 million), and real estate and public utilities taxes ($11.0 million), reflecting a general decline in income tax collections from prior years. The budget document provides multi-year financial reports organized by account and cost center, along with a 2021 position control schedule, establishing the city's financial plan for the fiscal year beginning January 19, 2021.

    AI summary

    budgettax revenuefinancial planning
    View PDFSource
  • City of Scranton City of Scranton 2023 Budget 2023 Budget

    Scranton, PA
    Budget

    The City of Scranton's 2023 General Operating Budget document presents amendments to the original budget proposal, filed as Council File #33, 2022. The amendments include revenue adjustments totaling approximately $47,863 (primarily from increased delinquent refuse collections and ARPA transfers) and expenditure reductions of approximately $240,582, with significant salary adjustments across multiple departments including Police, Fire, Business Administration, and Treasury. The budget amendments reflect a combination of revenue and spending modifications affecting core city operations and administrative functions.

    AI summary

    budget amendmentsrevenue adjustmentssalary adjustmentsmunicipal operationsarpa funding
    View PDFSource
  • 2025 Budget

    Mahanoy City, PA
    Budget

    The Borough of Mahanoy City presented its 2025 Annual Budget to Council on November 13, 2024, and approved it on December 10, 2024, with no proposed tax increase; the millage rate remains at 35.524 mils, distributed across General Fund (25.5 mils), Debt Reduction Fund (4.75 mils), Street Lighting Fund (3.85 mils), Fire Tax Fund (0.95 mils), Sinking Fund (0.124 mils), and Library Fund (0.35 mils). The budget incorporates $50,000 from the ARPA fund to cover the cost of a fifth full-time police officer and $200,000 from ARPA for the B Street project. The 2025 General Fund Operating Budget projects $919,708 more revenue than the 2024 year-end projection, driven primarily by projected grant income of $822,000, including $250,000 for Center Street acquisition and demolition, $150,000 for Kaiers Park, $100,000 for Main Street Streetscape project, and $250,000 for the ARDCO Grant. Real estate tax revenue is calculated based on a 72% collection rate for current year taxes.

    AI summary

    budgettax ratepublic safetystreet infrastructuregrants
    View PDFSource
  • Approved 2024 Budget

    Hazleton, PA
    Budget

    The City of Hazleton's 2024 approved budget projects total real estate tax revenue of $6,941,986, comprising $6,280,986 from current-year collections and $321,000 from prior-year collections. Special taxes are budgeted at $3,760,000, including $2,550,000 from earned income tax (1% rate split between the City and Hazleton School District), $510,000 from payroll preparation tax (0.26% on covered payroll), $400,000 from real estate transfer tax (City's 0.5% share), and $300,000 from local service tax ($52 per employee). Building and alterations permits are projected at $350,000 in revenue. The budget shows no changes between the proposed and council-approved versions across these revenue categories.

    AI summary

    View PDFSource
  • Governor's FY 2025 Executive Budget - Oklahoma.gov

    Oklahoma City, OK
    Budget

    Governor J. Kevin Stitt submitted Oklahoma's FY 2025 Executive Budget to the 60th Oklahoma Legislature, emphasizing financial recovery and building toward a "Top Ten State" vision. State tax collections reached a record $14.18 billion in FY 2023 but declined 4.4% to $13.56 billion in FY 2024, with FY 2025 expected to show slight decline and FY 2026 modest growth according to Oklahoma Tax Commission projections. General Revenue Fund collections for FY 2025 are projected at $8.40 billion, down $62 million from FY 2024 actuals, while total certified and authorized funds available for appropriation are estimated at $10.83 billion for FY 2025. Spending discipline from FY 2021–FY 2025 is projected to generate $4.6 billion in total state reserves and cash savings by the end of FY 2025, including $2.03 billion in constitutional and revenue stabilization reserves, $1.37 billion in General Revenue cash, and $1.24 billion in other dedicated fund balances.

    AI summary

    state budgettax revenuegeneral revenue fund
    View PDFSource
  • Approved 2025 Budget

    Hazleton, PA
    Budget

    The City of Hazleton approved its 2025 General Fund budget with amendments, projecting total real estate tax revenue of $8,154,357 (down from the proposed $8,654,357), comprised of current-year real estate taxes of $7,458,357 plus prior-year collections of $696,000. Special taxes are budgeted at $4,635,000, including earned income tax of $3,100,000 (1% rate split 0.5% to city and 0.5% to Hazleton School District), payroll prep tax of $810,000 (0.26% on covered payroll), local service tax of $375,000 ($52 per employed individual), and real estate transfer tax of $350,000 (city's 0.5% share of 2.0% transfer tax). Building and alterations permits are projected at $350,000. The budget document shows comparisons across 2023 actuals, 2024 final budget, 2024 year-to-date performance, and proposed 2025 figures both with and without council amendments.

    AI summary

    View PDFSource